oe - . uu July 8, 1361. Weekly FHournal of Politics, Literature, and Slews. 3 Vel XL we A CARD. ww. W. LORD & CBO, BG to tender their thanks to the Public generally for the extensive acd steadily increasing support received by them during the past five years of their copartnership, and have | now much pleasure in intimating, that having made very gre at} improvem ents in their place of business, they enjoy increased | facilities for attending to the wants of their customers. And | having Now An unusaally large and weil selected stock of GENERAL MERCHANDIZE, selling at lowest paying rates, they confideutly hope to receive a continuance of custou. Charlottetown, June 10, LS0l. “Gazelle.” “Carrie M Rich.” and ‘‘Prince of Wales.” | ‘ . e -tiveat Spring Importations, ER above vessels. Spung Stock, partly consisting of 25 Bales and Cases DRY GOODS, containing all the newest styles of Dress Materials Ladies’ Hoanets, Hats, Parasols, Ribbons, Pluries, &e. &e ; Hosiery, Haberdashery, Millinery &e; Shawls, Mantles, Shirtings, Cloths, Drills; Cassinetts, Merinos, Sattinet's, Nankeens, | Tietings, M leskins, Flannels, &c., &e. 10 Cases Children’s, Youth's, Misses’, Ladies* and Gents’ Boots, Shoes, Brogans, Slippers, &e. 20 doz. Ladies® and Children’s Spring Skirts; a splendid assortment Gent's Llats, ia Suk, Leghorn, Palm Leaf, Straw and Felt. 3000 Pieees Room Paper, large stock of Carpets, Rags, Mats, &c. i@ Bales Cotton Battings, Wadding and Wicking. i6 Cases and Casks of general Hardware, Catlery, Carpen- ter’s Tools, &c., &c., including alurge stuck too varied | to enumerate. 15) Pieces LMolloware, Kettles, Pots, Ovens, &c. 70 Crates and casks Glass, China and Earthenware, well selected. varied an: Cheap. 150 doz. Milk Dishes, Butter and Preserve Crocks. A LARGE STOCK OF Teas, Sugars, Candles, Raisins, Currants, Spices, Molasses. | Vinegar, Pickles. Burning Fluid, Oil, Varnish, Turpentine, (Glass, Putty, Whiting, Ochers, Salts, Saltpetre, Baking and Washing Soda, Starch, Indigo, Extract Logwood, Dye woods, | &e., 8000 yards Cotton and Hemp Canvass, Nos. 1 to 10; 230 coilt hemp and manilla Cordage, 6 thread to 7-in. ; 24 Uhain Cables, 13 Anchors, 50 tuns Iron, 14 buadles Steel, Cast, Blister, and Spring ; 100 sheets Zine, 100 bundles Oak- um, 80 casks and kegs Nails, 12) kegs Paints, Black, White, Green, Yellow. Prussian Blue, Vermillion, &e., &c.; Metal Shears, Windlass Gear, Warping Chalks, Llause-pipes, Seup- ver Lead, &e., &c.; Sole Leather, Buckets, Brooms Tubs, runks, Scythes, Forks, Shovels, Spades, &e.; 2,000 Sacks t. . All of which are offered at sach prices as to claim especial attention from purchasers. W. W. LORD & Co. Charlottetown, June 10, 1561. tf. Liverpool and Charlottetown, THE CLIPPER SHIP “ISABEL,” Ce and CO| PER FASTENED, A / MeDoyatp, Commander, will be despatched from LIVERPOOL for this port direct about the Ist September next. This favorite ship is well known to the mercantile com- munity of P E Island as tre fastest vessel in tie trade ; while the superior order in which she has uniformly diseharzed her éargoes commends her to the attention of shippers as u desi- erable conveyance Fur freight or paseage, having superior Cabin agcomodat'ons. fuse apply in Liverpool to ANpsew Duncan, Esq., 112 raffurd Chambers, South Juln Street, or to JAMES D. MASON. Charlottetown, July 22d 1861. 3i Eror Sale or to Let, And Immexlinte Possession given, v AT new two-storey COTTAGE, fronting the St. Peter's Road, near Mr. Crabb’s Corner, with a large Garden (under cultivation, and partly seeded) attached, the Property of the late James N. Hannis. If sold, 25 per cent of the pur- chase to be paid down, and the balance may remain secured en the property fur sume years. Apply to June 3, 1861. Ww. W. LORD. Executor. Notiec. ALL persons having any demands against the Estate of the +3 late JAMES N. HAKKIS, Eoqaire, of the City of Charlottetown, deceased, will please furnish the same, duly attestec to, withia six twatas from this date; and all persons indebted to the said Estate are hereby required to make immediate payment to the subscriber. W. W. LORD, Executor. 8rd June. _ Cherlottelowu, 2nd May, 186i. Sewing Machines. NOR SALE, Scovel & Goodel’s SEWING MACHINES which are giving such general satisfaction. Aprii 1, 1861. tf J. 8. CARVELL. Sole Leather, ] SIDES NOVA SCOTIA SOLE LEATHER, for sale b ALEX. McKINNON. J June 10, 1861. - An Excollent and Agreeable Tonic. RY CANTON GINGER PRESERVED IN SUGAR. A Jarge lot for sale, in any quantiiy, at the Cash Dra, f M. W. SKINNER. os PRESERVE KETTLES. I‘ Brass and Enamelled. BEER & SON. Charlottetown, July 8, 1861. lm LUMBER YARD. pee Subseriber has in his LUMBER YARD—BOARDS, SCANTLING, SUINGLES, &e., &e., for sale low. July %, 4861. tf. J.8. CARVELL. aera ae on me Salt! Salt!! Salt!!! N STORE, 6000 Bushels. duly 8, 1861. t J. S$. CARVELL. f. Cheap Molasses. I’ STORE, 20 Mhds. Heavy Coeap MOLASSES. -——AlL3S0-— A few Ihds. of very superior MOLASSES. July 8, 1861. tf J.8 CARVELL. ———— Wotice. NE undersigned having, by power of Attorney, bearing date the 18th day of July, ISGI, been duly constituted Attorney of the Assignees of ‘* Murray and Compapy,’’ lately wing business iu Ualifax, N. 5., under that firm—hereby g'¥es notice that imurediate payment of all debts due to the ‘id firm within this Isiand is requested and required to be @ade te hun. ANDREW MITCHELL, Atty. of Trustees. Ch.Town, July 29, 1861. Isl. lm ~ . JTSKAC NASH! ! FEW dozen SUY TUES trom the above eelebrated maker + for retail. BEER & SON. duly 8. lm .. HAYING TOOLS. ; & SEATHS, FORKS, RAKES, SUYTHE STONES. BEER & SON. daly 8. Te GIN. D() CASES DE Koyven's GIN, 6 Casks - do do. i Bond or Dat id, for sale by dane 10, 1861. att Yo: . ALEX. McKINNON. NA'TRURVs CURE. _ arper’s Metalic Sand. ae 's Ho patent humbug, but one of Nature's Great Re- a eaten all the afllieted need do to be evnvineed of its i. ve properties is to give it a trial as directed. It eures MatisM, Sarr Nuvgw, Scary Heap, Terrer, Rinc-Worw, he WELAS, SckoruLa, Paver Sones, Orv Cuzonic Uncees, &c. For certificates, &e. apply to ™ W. R. WATSON, "Y Drug Store, July 29,1261. Agent for P'F Island. The Subseribers have received their | | there. sculptured on the crags where they jut from beneath the ice 5S . J ; ‘tached to the geological bistory of the predecessors and re- “This is teue Libertw, when Freeborn Men, having to advise the Public, mav spenk free.”---Euripides. Charlottetown, Prince Edward island, Monday, August 5, £861, a PHoctry. THE NEW MOWN HAY. BY PARK BENJAMIN. | | Talk not to me of southern bowers, Or odors breathed from tropic flowers, Of spice trees after rain ; But of those sweets that freely flow When June’s fond breezes stir the low Grass, heaped along the plain. | This morning stood the verdant spears, All wet with diamond dew—the tears By night serenely shed ; This evening, like an army slain, They cumber the pacific plain With their fast fading dead. And when they fell, then all around Sach perfumes in the air abound As if long hidden hives | Of sudden richness were unsealed, When on the freshly trodden field They yielded up their lives. In idle mood I love to pass ‘Lhese ruins of the crowded grass, Or listlessly to lie, | Inhaling the delicious scenis Crushed from the downeast, yverdure.s tents, Beneath a sunset sky. ' It isa pure delight, which they W ho dwell in eities, far away, From rural scenes so fair, Can never know in lighted rooms; Pervaded by exotie blooms— This taste of natural air! Phis air, ro softened by the breath Exhaled and wafted from the death Of herbs that simply bloom, And, seurcely not d, like the best Dear frien ls, with whom this world is blest, Await the common dvoem— And leave oehind such sweet regret As in our *eart is living yet, Though heroes pass away ; Tal« not tu me of southern bowers, Ur odors breathed from tropic flowers, But of the new mown hay. ; | | ; ; | dtliscellaucons, Cuoice Exrract.—O, that hoarse veill of Ocean, never jsilent since time began—where has it not been uttered ! | There is stillness amid the calm of thé arid and rainless de- 'sert, where no spring rises and no streamlet flows, and the long caravan plies its weary march amid the blinding glare ‘ofthe sand and the red, unshaded rays of the fierce sun. | But once and again and yet again has the roar of ocean been jthere. It is mis sands that the winds heap up, and it is the | Skeleton remains of his vassals—shells and the stony coral— that the rock underneath enclose. tall mountain peak, with its glittering mantle of snow, where ‘the panting lungs labor to inhale the thin, bleak air—where | BO insect murmurs and no bird flies, and where the eye wau- }ders over multitudinous hill-tops that lie far beneath, and | Vast forests that sweep on to the distant horizon and along ‘long, hollow valleys, where the great rivers begin, and yet ! i , So e 7 }onee and again and yet azain has the roar of Ocean been The effigies of his more ancient devizens we find jinto the mizt-wreath, and bis latter breaches, stage beyond stage, terrace the descending slopes. Where has the great lestroyer not been—the devourer of continents, the biue, foaming dragon, whose vocation is to eat up the land? His icefloes have alike furrowed the flat steppes of Siberia and the | rocky flanks of Schehallion ; and his numeralites and fish lie | | ‘ ‘ ‘ . ° ; ‘embedded in great stones of the l’yramids, hewn in the times} iment, with others still in his clique, at one time souglit to de- ef the old Pharouhs, and in rocky folds of Lebanon, still un-| prive you of three-fourths of your votes—that his policy has touched by the tool. So long as ocean exists there must be disintegration, d.lapidation, change, and should the time ever arrive when the elevatory agencies, motionless aud chill, shall |sleep within their profound depths to awaken no more—and jshould the sea continue to impel its currents and to roll its waves—every continent and island would at leagth disap- pear, and again, as of old, ** when the fountains of the great deep were broken up,” ** A shoreless ocean tumble round the globe.” H. Miter. -_—— 80 a Romantic Carrer or A Woman.—A correspondent of the Times gives the following particulars of the extraordinary career of an aged woman, named Barnes, who is now in a state | of destitution, and in whose case the Revy’d Arthur R. God- ‘son, J, Devonshire street, Portland-place, W., interested him- iself : —* Sheridan knew her as a chi'd, and persuaded her | father to apprentice her, at the age of 14, to Mrs. Jordan, who trained her as Little Pickle, in the * Spoilt Child’ and other }minor characters. At 16 she married John Simonds, a sea- man of the Culloden, and accompanied him to the West [n- Correspondence. To tus Eprror or tHe Examiner. ee Sir—It is now well understood that the Royal Commission- | ers have agreed to their report on the Land Question, but as | that report can have no effeet until it shall be confirmed by an | Act of the Legislature, 1 think it is tue duty of the Governs| , ment to make it known to the country at once, and let the ; opinion of the people be passed apon it in the only constitu- j tional way in which it can be aseertained—by a general | election. This would be carrying out the views of the Duke of Neweastle in one of his first despatches on the subject of | the Commission, wherein his Grace says, that the Lieutenant | Governor is first to ascertain whether the tenantry will or will {not agree to the Commission. By this it is evident that the | Duke contemplated an election being held. It will be remem- | bered also that his Grace said, in a subsequent despateh, | that no proprietors should be bound by the award but those | who agreed to the arbitration. | be bound by the award until they bave given their unqualified assent at the llustings in favor of the Commission. which was passed in the Session befere the last to confirm the award ef the Commissioners, was detained here five months after it passed to give the proprietors an opportunity of peti- tioning against it. Their petitions. were the means of pro- curing the suspension of the Bill. Now, if the interests and so important a matter.surely the whole tenantry of the Island ought to be consulted before they shall be bound down by any | law that may be passed inour local Legislature ; and the only j way in which they can be consulted is by a dissolution. } Yours, &c. Ch.Town, August 2, 1801. GEORGE COLES. 2 —* i | | | opinions of the proprietors were deserving of consideration in | } ' ( To rHe Epiror or roe Examiner. { Srr—Mr. W. LU. Pope’s sarcastic addresses to the Protes- | tants of this Island show plainly that he is actuated lees by a llove of truth than the mischievous desire of instigating the ; Catholics to a breach of the public peace. Should he prove } successful in creating & riot, or causing bloodshed, hie ulterior object will eventually be gamed. I trust, however, that the | forbearance and discernment which our Roman Catholic friends | have hitherto displayed, may still enable them to steer clear of the artifice by which he seeks to ruin the Liberai cause. ‘The i patient endurance of his revilings will asuedly turn the jtables vpon himself and his abettors. The disturbances in | Mayo and in Newfourdland, even if truthfully represented, cin have no relation to the state of affsirs here, any more than | j the massecre of the Macdonalds at Glencoe moy prejadice the and, bv the bye, the characters of h ihe“ immortal Wrlam” and his Orange advisers do not emerge | scatholeea fromthat horrible narrative. Butit is nat my objeer ‘o rake up the records of such bygone atrocities, althoogh such acu.se may suit the tastes of our more modern William, who, if all be true, has no aspirations after immortality. The Pr.- l teetaait party jn this place must be but indifferently organied lif they can find mo better advocate for their interests than a superficial sceptic, and one whose fame fer honourable dealing has been publicly ques “‘oned. Both Protestans and Catholics have hitherto lived together in amity, and imthe interchange of neighbourly attentions; and can it now be permitted that this desirable state of things should be superaeded by a course of | rancour, hostility, and mutual and wniversal distrust? Ileaven forbid! Surely the sreering invective o! our unhappy aye: jtary and Editor can only be palatable ic the narrow-minded | bigots and ‘TYory part'sans for whom he works. Neither may ‘his friends consider hin altogether free from eusp:ciot in his | Protestantism of Sentland ; | tholie faith, since he has been heard to say that were he u.'led | upon to make a choice of creeds, he would, certainly adopt thay lof Rome, inastouch as it was the only Chareh in winch lie could | discern the principle of Christian unity. “So «uch for the con- | sistency of our Colonia! Secretary, who, in his quixotic zeal for | ; Orange ase: ndancy, would thus recklessly embroil the peaee- | | *ble tuhebitants of this Island in allthe athipathies and horrors | } of religious strife! What, in the nante*of fortune, can the jauthorities be about in taciily permitting these dingerous missiles to be thrown amongst us? Are the peace and welfare | of the country to be placed in jeopardy that their minion may | be continued in office ? Surely, the old proverb in this case well applies—** Whom the gods destroy they firet make mad.’* | Electors of Prince Edward Island bestir yourselves, and ; Arise to the defence of your liberties, or they will goon be be- Do not allow youreelves to be misled by Remember that the Leader of the Govern- j } } \ | yond youre grasp. partly mat @uveres, been, and still is, to obstruct reform ; avd to pander to proprie- tery influence. As he himself would tel! you, ‘* the time has not yet arrived”’ for full political freedoin. Did not he and his coadjutors sirain every nerve to oppose the introduction of Re- sponsible Government? Is not its present farcica! metamorphose the effect of their wonder working ingenuity? And was it not one of ‘their latest efforts against you to silence the voice of opposition by on act of arbitrary power? Place no confidence either in them or in their Secretary. They are not your friends. Your duty is to search more narrowly than ever the records of their past proceedings, and to make your prepapations for their approaching overthrow. A PROTESTANT. Charlottetown, August 1, 1861. THE LAST DODGE OF THE GOVERNMENT— RELIGLOUS INTOLERANCE. Me. Epitor,—It is a very common trick of a lawyer when he has a bad cause, in his address to the jury to appeal to the ment. dies, under Sir Edward Peilew (Lord Exmouth) She was the last offices to Captain Duff, who was killed early in the | action. Her husband himself was killed eariy in the day, | leaving her with four sens. In 1768 she married Henry | Bevan, a soldier in the 42d, and went with the regimont 10 | the Peninsula, where she again became a mother. This | child was killed in her arms during the retreat on Corune, and her husband fell in the celebrated charge of the 50th and 42ud, which drove the French from the field. She attended ou Sir Jobn Moovze during his last moments, aud was pre- sent at his funeral. ere Captain Muray was so struck with her youth and distress, that he told her that if ever she 1b assist her, until his decease in 1859, since which time |she has been friendless. After leaving the Peniisu'a ehe |became lady’s maid to Mrs. 8. Smith, wife of the Knglish | Ambassador at Constantinople ; om their way there the wo- lece were taxen prisoners in Italy. The mistress escaped with a very mild form of bondage, but Murat sent the maid ito the hulks at Toulon for six months. Of her four sons by the first marriage, two were killed in the Queen Charlotte at | Algiers; the third fe'l in the 23rd Regiment, in one of | Lord Gough's actions in India; and the fourth, in the Fus- isars, at Balaklava. By ber third husband, who is also | dead, she has three sons and a daughter. Of these the eldest was lost overboard from Lord Proby’s frigate, off Matta ; the second and third in a collier, on their way from Shields ; and the daughter died in the service of an English lady in the south of France.” mt 0 Antiquity or TH# Pic.—ihe pig is the existing represen- tative of a very ancient race of mammals which lived and died upon this earth long before there were Christiaus to devour, or Jews to abhor their ficsh. The same species of wild boar that was hunted by our forefathers was contempo- rary with the mammoth, cave-bear, and the long-haired rhino- ceros. Some persons imagine that geology deals oaly with fossi! shells or fishes ; but there is a vast deal of interest at- | presentatives of our domestic animals. We kaow that the | wild ancestor of our domestic pig was in existence before the ‘seperation of Kngland from the Continent of Europe; and ‘that the hunter, bad hunters then lived might have chased the boar through the site of which is now occupied by the | waves of the English Channel. Mammoths, tigers, and rhino- | eeroces perished, but the wild boar lived, and lives still on the Continent of Kurope, though extinct here. —Old Benes ; by the Rey. W. S. Simonds. . | Eprzcr or re War.—The World says that the city of New | York has suffered by the Southern rebellion and repudiation profession, enlist either the pity, the bigetry or the indignation | Neither should the tenantry | The Act | lators. And what are the qualifications which the peopte are | asked to prefer in theic rulers to pure Pitriotisin and able states. minship? The answer—is and Lam almost ashamed to write it —sound Protesiantsin, according to their definition of the word, and eu implacable hatred of Catholics and Catholicism. Pro- ; vided the candidate for legislative honours possess the later | of these novel atiributes of statesinanship, the want of all others jm-y be easily disp ned with. He may. beignorant, vicious ) 2nd wnpriveipled; yet, according to their shewing, he is fully a" Hitied to make a staunch and reliable pillar of the state. In order to divert attention from the blundering legislation ,and fiecal mismanagement of the present Governmen:, these | piows, learned and truthful journalists endeavour to exeite the | fears of Protestants, by expavating on the dreadful consequences of * Catholic ascendancy.’* By a sort of logica! hocus pocus, known only to such writers, | the words Protestantisia aud Toryism are made convertible terms a8 are Liberalisin and “ Popery.”’ {t follows then that jevery Tory isa sound Protestant, and every Liberal either a “Pap si’” ontright, a secret fevourer of “ Rewanism,” of a “tool?” of the priests, This will be news to the many Liberal Protestants on the Island, whose orthodoxy has hitherto been unquestioned, and who, in their simplicity, have thought reli- | gion one thing and polities another. It ia to be hoped that they |will not be so uncharitable as to suppose that there are other and mrs active tool manufacturers in the country than the Ca- tholic priesthood, | llaving scared the wavering, and branded the undeceivable | among Protestants, these writers hope to ensure the victory for | their party by exasperating the Catholics. No pains are spared to effect this. The inost vivlent abuse is heaped Bpon them, | their clergy, and their religion. Those things deemed by them most sacred are held up to the senseless ridicule of the thought- less, the vicious and the profane. Neither the charity of “the | Christiah, nor the courtesy of the gentleman is observed in the Ny aunent they receive at the hands of these conscientious in- structors of the publtic—these sanctified upholders of a godly Government. But I hope, as Protestauts are too inte ligent and | and fearless to be either duped by their flattery or frightened by their taunts or threats, so will Catholics have too much good j sense and forbearance to be provoked by their malicious but ‘feeble attempts to malign and misrepresent them. ‘Their aim lis easily discoverable. Itis to fan the spark of religious dis- cord into a flame, to make religion, not polities, a party cry | Ymongst us —to range in the bitterest enmity one section of the |community against the other. What though the direst conse- quences follow? ‘They, having prepared the mine, laid the train, j and applied the mateh, will hold up their hands in amazement ) and holy indignation at the destruction produced by. the explo- sion. But the gailt is theirs nevertheless, (Let them see to it. eal Yours truly, Princetown, July 25, 1861. A PROTESTANT. } _—————__++- Dees TO THE COLONEAL. SECRETARY, &c. &e. Sir,—IL beg to acknowledge .your favours of the respective dates of the 19th and 26th altimo, published in the Jslander newspaper, and addressed to myself in common with some forty-five thousand of the inhabitants of this Colony, over your private signature. Your speeial patronage and tender consideration for the professing Protestants of this community will doubtloss be re- ceived with that unatterable loathing and supreme contempt it and you 80 richly deserve. For our old acquaintance sake, 1 had fain not say, write, or even think any thing barsh about you; but having heard you , 80 ofter declare that if you ever made up your mind to honor any branch of the Christian Church with your adherence, you should certainly give the Roman Catholic the preference, | Wy <4 of ates at , é ye : P ILere is the sileuce o the! very assaults upon what he deems the errors of the Ruan = 'eann »t bat conclude, from your most wicked and vie publi- | cations, that it is your own remporat benefit, rather than the spigitual well-being of your Protestant fellow-subjects you Sten QRH. Stneore!+ boping, that if any human being, to say nothing of any pablic v-Feial in a British Colony, has proved himeelf so lost te a sensayy. Cuty and decency as to have striven to lretain his publie posific’ of fostering the lamentable religious bigotry of bis fellow-being*. that I may hear, ere my intended return from England in a few weeks, that his hateful effigy has been bung and burnt in the puvtie squares of Charlotte- town. I remain, Sir, your cbhedient servant, i" STEPHEN SWABEY. Charlottetown, August 1, 1861. (For rue Examiner) OUR REPRESENTATIVES. Drak Fetrow Coronisrs,—In fulfilment of the promise I made at the close of my former Ccommanication to you, I now covunue my observations ou the above subject, with a view of carrying out the loudly called for object | have in contemplation, of which | made mention in the referred to communication ; that is, to make you sensible of the very imporiart duty incum- bent on you towards yourseives, your country, and your succeed- lng generations, in dislodging “y power of your franchise from \acir easy seats in the hails of our Legislation, those of eur re- presentatives who have dispisyed so great an amountof the grasping, selfish, hypocritical diabolical impulse, as to trampie under feet your rights, as to leave you an enslaved and a down- \radden people —as to sacrifice your prosperity, your importance, your happiness, to the most infamous seifishness and the basest cupidity. In perfo ming this task 1 look forward for the ema nation of beneficial resulis from it. It is absolutely necessary io your emancipation that an effort should be made to arouse — ~ —— — Se ——— EE New Series.---No, 31, that I have suggesied to avert her fate a into deep and extensive walere, where = = = eae complete her important voyage aw the port of prosperity. Itve needless for me to recount their numerous pialondon T have been told over so often by different friends of libert that it would be only a useless waste of time to comment oo now. In the unanswerable letters of * Aurora” aman dumbee Wilhock,” to whch 1 would particularly direct attenlion, are given a considerable number of those of the blcoker caste, sufficient in themselves to disgrace any nation. Thee '3 4 system Of imerule which myst be an indelible stigma upon the sbounnable wnd diabolical el que who have wrought deeds so detrimental to our well-being, se harrassing in their effets, for || No other purpose and with no other apology than a morbid desire tor world'y emolument for themselves and their ha Their foul deeds, their morbid cravi h gain, their utter disregard for the interests wites eee been graphically pourirayed in their shufiling conduct regards ing the Land Commission. I[t was instituted fur the of settling all disputes ex sting between landlord and tenant. ‘That it has failed to accomplish that great object is a certai Let ihe Royal Commissioners be ever so well disposed coat a satisfaciory award, what benefit can we expect from their honest intentions, when there is no law to give effect to their award? The [iil passed here to that effect was del ed fire months in the sending of it home, which delay gave sont for the interposition of proprietary influence there whch ace counts for the disallowance of the Act? When the Commie- stovers commenced their investigations, you expected that you would be relieved from the evils and grievances of accursed pro- prietoryisin. How grievously you have been ve aoe: inted ! By whom? By the Tories. ‘hey contrived to render Com- mission impotent. Your highest ‘hopes have been blighted. You have been cruelly disappointed in your sanguine expecta~ Hons, which renders the galling and soul-recking chains of re- lentless proprievory despotisin still more torturing. You are sti’ bondsmen, harrassed and afll ected, after all you hoped and expected from the famous Land Commission—afier the on bread | of intense excitement it produced rie the length and of our landlord ridden tsland—afier all the eu it bas ex- tracted from our exhausted funds and from a ee Ba what else could we expect from a proprietory gang who have ever and always sought to harrass the ‘enantry ?, What elee could we expect when the reins of Legis'ative power placed in their bands but oppression avid pains! ft ‘was you who gave~them the power. “Wil! you wrest it from them or leave it with them ? -4 should think you will not do the latter, unless you entertain an unconquerable hatred to your coun! y. and liks Samson of old, will hus pull away the pillars of this insular idol hall of these proprietory Philistines, to effect which object you ore willing to witness and involve-yourself in the common destruction, | think this is not the ease with you. You would like io see yourselves on the road to’ prosperity 1 arn suré you wauild like to see your ‘country flourish under wise and just Legislation. Your obedient servant, NORWEGIAN. ? o> ai To rar Eorror or tur Bx [ . Sin—The official blundering of the Goveriionctt id becoming more apparent, and the sooner their down & 3 complished the better forthe Colony. It is clearly manifess they never were destined by nature te rule a people. I could easily recount more then half a dozen blunders comumitted them in making their few appointments in thie locality. instance will suffice 65 an example for the who'e. ce The Protector_of the Alewives fisheries for thig Distric having some time ago resigned, and the said fisheries being of considerable value in the neighborhood, a petition was forthwith forwarded to His Excellency in Council, praying the appoint- ment of a Protector to fill the vacany, and at the same time ré- commending Mr. Hogh McAdam as a fit and proper person to fill the sane. McAdam was gazetted as Protector about five weeks ago, and at. the same time officially noticed of his te > pointment, but no Act or copy of Laws furnished to him his guidance, alihough the law says, “ there shall be furni ta each person so being appointed Protector or Overseer as nforessid a copy of this Act, and alsoof the Act,” &e. R is current here that the chief Clerk of the Council or Colonial Secretary has carried off the keys of the public offices in his fob, and no jaws or copy of laws can be had till his return. that as it may, the poor Protector was left roping about in the dark, seeking information from the Magistrates, until perplexed and grieved by hooting of boys and fishermen, he crlied on the late Protector, who kindly furnished him with the much desired you to atrike for freedom. | feet almost confident that these disinterested lubours of mine will have that wholesome effect, unless, indeed, that you Lave given up hopes of ever becoming | tree, and, therefore, have sunk down into a dogged submission forward and pourtraye the distressed state you are in—direcis with her husband, in the Mars, at Trafalgar, and assisted in | of the jury on his side, he is sare of a verdict in tis favour, even | Your altention to the cause ef your misery—shows you what was in difficulties to apply to hint; and he kept his promise | though the evidence heard and the law laid down, when coolly | happiness and prosperity would accrue from a removal of the | and impartially considered, should warrant a very different | Couse of that misery, and assures you that you are possessed of | finding. This is not becanse the men composing the jury are the power to eficet this great object, and to reinstate and dis- more dishonest er weaker than the generality of persons of the | sewinate through the length and breadth of the land, liberty, same elass, but because the great majority of men, when. under | bappinese, prosperity, greatness, | fee! confident, unless you strong ©xcitements are incapable of reasoning with exactness | #re the meanest dupes in existence, that you will bring to pass or of judging withimpartialuy. But though the weak, unwary, | 4t the next election that to which L most ardently aspire—the et well-intentioned jurymen are looked upon with compassion | Commencementof an era from which may be dated our country’s y jury p } and syinpathy by the unmterested, dispassionate observer, he | eedum. You have remained long enough in a state of inac- cannot regard with respect or approbation the crafty, calcula. |tvily. You have lamented, you have murmured, you have rei- ting advocate, who, to make the worse appear the better rea- | terated with unms'akable poignancy in your tones, the crushing ~o1, violates every principle of truth, and every rule of. sound | evil and deleterious consequences of your want ot foresight and reasoning. fe may edmite the ability displayed, but he can-| prudence in placing men in parliament who have made a foot- not but feel contempt for the man who prostitutes his talents to | stool of your liberty ; still you have not made an effort, nor establish wrong, to Coulirm prejudice, orto perpetuate igno-| have you shown any symptoms of making an effurt to undo what rance. But it is paying an undeserved compliment to mea of | you have done amiss, You kuow and deciare that you have this class to give them credit for possessing talent of a high | done wrong, but your actions prove that you do not fully con- order: dhat indeed would more frequently be a hindrance than | ce!ve the extent of that wrong, and therefore you do not consi- ahelptothem. ‘The gifts most commonly possessed by them | der it of much consequence whether yon do or do not repair it. are a plentiful supply of low cunning, an unbounded stre'ch of |! am firmly persuaded that if you could but conceive the unblushing inpudence, and a measureless capacity for equivo- | amount of m sery brought upon the country, as 1 do; if you, cation and lying. Tuese, together witha loud voice and a) Were but imbued with the same feelings that Lam, respecting | ready utterance, form the whole stock ia trade of the modern | er country, its condition and itsscourges, and if you could but | sophist, whether professional or other. behold liberty in the same ligbt in which I view it, you wou'd | have been led into the above train of remarks by observing | arise from your present torpid position, and with one caentay the course lately pursued by the newspapers in the Couserva- | 9008 effort destroy for ever the power of the tyrants who sway tive interest printed in Charlottetown. A new election is.at-| our destinies, and thereby effectually eradicate from. the land, hand. Puble attention will be turned towards politics for a | despotism, thraldom, and tyranny. It is, therefore, to tranemit season at Jeast. ‘The acts of the Government will be discussed | to you my feelings touching this subject, or im other words, to | with more or less wrtelligence and abili y ta every settiement | lead you to a conception of the magmtude of the injury inflieted on the ivland. ‘The qualifications of iis several members wil] | Upon our country that | now have ventared upon the public | be canvas-ed at every.sucial gathering. The good it has done, | "rena, so that the possession of such feelings may incite and and the evils ut hes averted, will be spoken of. kvery where its | SUmulate yon to obliterate for ever from our Island the accursed | defenders will praire ijs acts, and paliate its errors, and every | power by which we are ruled with a rod of iron. ‘ where will ite opponents magnify iis mistakes and question its !n my last epistie | remarked that an impartial investigation | integrity. All this is as it should be. An honest Government, | of the Parliamentary labours of our representatives had con- | strong in the consciousness of baving acted uprightly, would vinced me that the maladministration, whose deleterious con- court inquiry and invite discussion. 11 would, through the | sequences stare us, is not the work of one party, but that both | press, give the people a plain unvarnished account of ive doings, | #48 had a hand in causing us to feel its crushing effects. Let and supply its advocates with the requisite argumenis io its fa-| Us now see which has had the lion’s share in this nefarious | vour. Any other course would be unwise, mmpoliuc, and| work. There is very litle difficulty in deciding this point. dishonest, The Tories most certainly have. That is 80 manifest that there | The question at issue between the Governmentand the people | 's little or no necessity for me to bring forward facts or argu- | is—what good has that Government done since iis accession to | ments to prove it. You all feel at. Mven their warmest sup power? What evils has it lessened? Wiat burdens bas it | porters acknowledge n; and {| am sur2 they themselves, if a | taken away? What debts bas it paid? What beneficial Jaws morbid cupidity for worldly gain and agcrandizement has not has it enacted? | What public works has it constructed? ‘The , bereaved them of every manly feeling and Christian thought, | supporter of the Government who directs public attention to cannoi but reproach themselves with feelings of remorse for | any other than these and kindred topics is raising a false issue, | having conspired in bringing upon the country a load of debi | and becomes the disingenuous and unprincipied advocate, rather | and misery from which itis ampossible for it to recover, until | than the upright, fearless defender or candid apologist. } pewspapers already ailuced to have placed themselves. For-|exeerience and honesty saking the defence of the policy of the Governmenut—as in de«| monstrous and perilous breakers among which she now ledours feusible, | suppose—they claim the support of the people for }and tosses, who will guide her safely from the fatal rocks into its members on other grounds than t , little if any short of one hundred and fifty millions of dollars. of the'r public duties us advisers of the Governor and es legis-; will prove her destruction ere long, if you do not adopt the means | Demosthenian orator since the days of. | Dukes,and even the Ki such time as we will furnish the vessel! of state with a trust-' ) Dut this is precisely the situation in which the Ediiors ofthe werthy captain and crew, whose superior wisdom, skill, human intellect could will extricate her from the angry, ' the proper discharge | whose vicinity she now speeds with headlong rapidity, which ) efforts of our great men, Mr. Coles was found not guilty copy of the Acts. Some people say Mr. Pope bas gone ona y'grimage to the Eternal City to atone for the scancale enun- cinteu >¥ him the last two years against Catholics, Yours, &c., ~ St. Peter's, Juce 29, 1864. MAC. RULE AND MISRULE C¥ THE PRESENT MINISTRY. (No. 7.) To rug Epiror or rug ExaMrnes, ' Resrscrep Sim—A report was current some few years ago, for the truthfulness of which I shali not vouch, but it as follows :—Mr. Palmer was accused by Mr. Mooney of ma ing use of whiskey in order to obtain the votes of the Brackley Point peoplg for some political partizan of bis. . Mr. Mooney, in rising to e allusion to the affair, was somewhat slow in coming “to fe real question. Mr. Palmer, impatient to hear his commen yupon the matter, bawled out, To the point, Mr. Mooney, @t once.’’ ** YesSir, please your honor, 1 will, and in doing “go, [ shall come around by Brackley Point.”? Now, Sir, I sha on Mr. Palmer’s principle of coming directly to the pointeeetin aside many of those Brackley Point questions which shduld not be left untouched, but which are ** too namerous to mention.”’ The McGill ease,although fresh in the mind of every think- prejudices and feelings of the jurors rather than to their judg- | to your fate, from which it would be difficult 1f not impossible | ing person, demands passing notice. It will be unne If he can by ap adroit use of tiatiery create an impres- | to uplift you. However, | think you are still attentive and obe- for me to relate the details of the case. Suffice it to say, that sion in his own favour, and by those arts so well knowa to his | dient to the voice of reason and truth. When a friend comes | because Major McGill merely acted a8 Col. Gray did, before the Land Commssion, in the capacity of a ‘* privete citizen,” when chosen as Chairman Ly the Celtic Volunteers to ex their disapprobation of the Gevernor’s conduet in refusing them firearms, Mr. McGill, for this hienous crime, was at once dismissed from the Militia. Major MeGill, scorning such an arbitrary exercise of authority, made an pean defence of his late conduct through the columns of Exa- miner. But because he dared to exercise that. freedom of speoch which is the constitutional right of every subject under the protection of the British Government— because of this he was dismissed from the Commission of the Peace! M. McGill could not bear the idea vf that. Me thought with the oet :— p “Tt was not fit, nor could it bear the shock : Of rational discussion, that a man, Compounded and made up like other men Of elements tumultuous, in whom lust And folly in as ample measure meet As in the bosoms of the slaves he rules— Should be a despot absolute, and boast Himself the only frooman of bis land.’” Should this despotic principle be carried out, man would be a mere machine, deprived of free-will, robbed of all sibility as a moral agent, the Magna Charta of his liberties broken—and all claim to the privilege of free-born Britons would be forever obliterated. Jn resigning your own commiv sion, Mr. Editor, you acted a wise part. Let this affair be a warning to all independent men. A more contemptible transaction than that of the Govern- ment with respect to Mr. Uoles cannot be found on. the par- liamentary records of civilised legislation, This case requires little comment. Parson McAulay at first denied that Mr. Coles accused the Goyernor of ** lying and falsehood,’’ and shortly after tried to convict him of it! Stran i y that! The Goverment was enraged. Mr. rd must be culled. Le gives his testimony. Mr. Coles is acquitted by him. Mr. Gordon is then called before the august tri - His evidence is also in favor of Mr. Coles. And vee ey. Po of the Islander, heard him distinctly assert it! Well, ote all this cavilling, seheming, and rey. , what was done? Mr. Coles is honorably acquitted. He triamphs all ‘fhe trial of Warren Hastings was barely equal to this greas affair. When the thanders of Barke’s eloquence made the trish oak of Westminster Hall tremble—when Sheridan sum- ming up the horrib'e Begum the high-soul’d Wind- ham pouring forth in flowery accentsand * the * thun- dered forth his captivating ora : . the middle state of soniet ithe acukaarefuapiaeinesin, tke the pot—a conan Pia would be on same 8 noble testim t justice done to the humblest peasant conan to the individual ruled over millions of his fellow-creatares: in the face of all this display, all the arguments, all the skill and logic which pat forth, Warren Hastings was ae- quitted. The eloquence of those oratorical laminaries wasno greater, | would suppose, than that of the Parson, the Covk sparrow, honest John, and many others. Yet despite all the i Surely the case was not a bad one ! nein aueenamemeneamemmemmmammanmatans _e